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Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS logoLink to Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
. 2006 Sep 29;63(23):2755–2763. doi: 10.1007/s00018-006-6274-5

SET domain protein lysine methyltransferases: Structure, specificity and catalysis

C Qian 1, M -M Zhou 1,
PMCID: PMC11136235  PMID: 17013555

Abstract.

Site- and state-specific lysine methylation of histones is catalyzed by a family of proteins that contain the evolutionarily conserved SET domain and plays a fundamental role in epigenetic regulation of gene activation and silencing in all eukaryotes. The recently determined three-dimensional structures of the SET domains from chromosomal proteins reveal that the core SET domain structure contains a two-domain architecture, consisting of a conserved anti-parallel β-barrel and a structurally variable insert that surround a unusual knot-like structure that comprises the enzyme active site. These structures of the SET domains, either in the free state or when bound to cofactor S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine and/or histone peptide, mimicking an enzyme/cofactor/substrate complex, further yield the structural insights into the molecular basis of the substrate specificity, methylation multiplicity and the catalytic mechanism of histone lysine methylation.

Keywords. SET domain, histone lysine methylation, structure-function, chromatin modifications

Footnotes

Received 10 June 2006; accepted 22 August 2006


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